16 hours ago The nurse receives an intershift report on four assigned patients with iron deficiency anemia (IDA). After a review of each patient's history, combined with the shift report information, which patient should the nurse see first? A 5-year-old with headache and fatigue A 16-year-old who menstruates for an average of 5 days each month >> Go To The Portal
The nurse has just received a report on four patients in her assignment. Which of the following patients should the nurse see FIRST? A patient four days post-appendectomy complains of sudden warmth and pain at the incision site. A patient four hours post-gastrectomy who is resting comfortably in bed.
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The nurse cares for a patient on an acute cardiac unit. The nurse writes her note for the next shift. It is vital to communicate which of the following information to the next shift? 1. Vital signs during the shift, lab work drawn on the patient, and nutritional intake. 2. The patient's physician's name, the patient's age, and activity tolerance.
All the information listed above is important, but the correct answer is the only answer that includes reports of the patient's overall tolerance to care and cardiac results. The nurse working on the diabetic specialty unit cares for four patients. A nursing assistant reports that each of the patients requires the nurse's attention.
The nurse receives report on 4 clients. Which client should the nurse see first ? Clients who have had a stroke can experience cognitive dysfunction (eg, confusion), neglect on one side, deficits in spatial perception, and paralysis (hemiplegia), all of which increase the risk for injury (eg, falls).
A patient three days post-op rhinoplasty. This patient is stable and requires nursing care- perfect for the LPN. A charge nurse on the cardiac unit observes a new graduate nurse as she suctions a patient with a tracheostomy. What action, if performed by the graduate nurse, would require intervention from the charge nurse?
A urine collection bag collects the urine but the infant may not void every 30 minutes. If no increase is seen in the osmolality, the infant may have hereditary nephrogenic DI, which can be confirmed by subsequent DNA testing. Because the child is not deprived of water, there is no need for an IV. 16.
The nurse should first treat the child instead of waiting for the laboratory to come draw blood. If the nurse has bedside glucose monitoring available, check the glucose first, then treat, but do not wait the several minutes it will take for phlebotomy. Because the child has low blood sugar, do not give insulin.